The OUTMU Incompleteness Theorem
There is a moment, after you’ve lived with the idea of ontic uncertainty long enough, when something subtle begins to shift. At first, uncertainty feels like a lack — a gap in the world, a place where something should be but isn’t. A missing value. A blank. A question mark waiting for an answer. But if you sit with it, if you let it breathe, you begin to notice that uncertainty is not a hole in the fabric of being. It is the fabric. It is the openness from which everything else emerges. It is the condition that allows anything at all to be different from anything else. It is the generative ground. And once you see that, once you understand that uncertainty is not a defect but the primordial condition of reality, something else becomes clear — something I didn’t fully see when I wrote OUTMU, but which now feels almost embarrassingly obvious. You begin to see why every metaphysical system that tries to close itself, to complete itself, to seal itself off from uncertainty, eventually c...